Ludwig van Beethoven was just twenty years old when he first met Joseph
Haydn, in 1790. Two years later, the young composer joined the Viennese
master’s numerous pupils. But, weary of his teacher’s frequent absences
and stung by his criticisms, he soon broke off his lessons, declaring
bitterly some years later ‘I never learnt anything from Haydn’. It is
this distance, this difference of style and ambition between Beethoven and his former teacher that are to be heard in this new recording by
Olivier Cavé, the award-winning Swiss pianist who is a regular guest at
the leading festivals. Whereas Haydn’s Sonata Hob. XVI:32 (1776) aims
for a classical but vigorous style, Hob.XVI:48, composed only four years
later, is more subdued and academic. Beethoven sought to break with
this classicism, allowing himself greater expressive scope and replacing
the traditional third-movement minuet with a scherzo in his Sonata
no.2, a clear sign of his revolutionary spirit.
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